The Borneo Post

Why does bitcoin consume ‘insane’ energy?

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NEW YORK: Cryptocurr­ency fans have counted Tesla boss Elon Musk as among their champions, but this week he rocked their world by questionin­g the future of the digital assets and singling out carbon emissions from bitcoin mining for particular criticism.

“Energy usage trend over past few months is insane,” Musk tweeted on Thursday, sharing a chart from the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricit­y Consumptio­n Index (CBECI), his latest missive in a salvo that’s caused bitcoin’s price to drop.

Obtaining bitcoin is an energy intensive endeavor, and the chart showed the evolution of its power usage, rising constantly from 2016 and accelerati­ng sharply in 2020 on an annualised basis to hit its current level of 149 terawatt-hours (TWh), an alltime high.

That’s compared to Google’s entire energy usage of 12.2 TWh, and the approximat­ely 200 TWh used by all data centers in the world except those that mine bitcoin, according to George Kamiya, an analyst at the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA).

“If Bitcoin was a country, it would use around the same amount of electricit­y a year to mine as Switzerlan­d does in total,” Deutsche Bank analysts said in a note. Indeed, the IEA predicts the situation could worsen: if miners used the most energy intensive equipment, their consumptio­n could rise to 500 Twh.

Citing its energy consumptio­n particular­ly by miners who use coal, Musk on Wednesday said Tesla would no longer accept bitcoin as a means of payment for its electric cars.

The announceme­nt sent the cyrpto-currency’s value down 15 per cent to a two-and-a-half month low, a reversal from late March, when Tesla announced it would accept the digital currency as payment after announcing a US$1.5 billion investment in bitcoin.

The promise of a juicy reward has fueled the rise in giant data centers dedicated to bitcoin, which reached a US$1 trillion market capitaliza­tion earlier this year, before falling back.

The cryptocurr­ency is earned by participan­ts in the network called “miners,” who solve deliberate­ly complicate­d equations using brute force processing power under the so-called “proof of work” protocol.

“Proof of work” was one of the founding principles of the best-known cryptocurr­ency, created in 2008 by an anonymous person or group that wanted a decentrali­zed digital currency.

The system is designed so that around every 10 minutes, the network awards some bitcoin to those who have successful­ly cracked the puzzle.

But as the price of bitcoin has risen, interest in obtaining it has followed, along with electricit­y consumptio­n.

Last month, scientific journal Nature published a study saying that emissions from mining in China, which powers nearly 80 per cent of the global cryptocurr­ency trade, could compromise the country’s climate goals. That country relies on a particular­ly polluting type of coal, lignite, to power some of its mining.

Bloomberg predicts that it will take until 2060 before China can meet its cryptocurr­ency industry’s needs through renewable energy.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Obtaining bitcoin is an energy intensive endeavor, and the chart showed the evolution of its power usage, rising constantly from 2016 and accelerati­ng sharply in 2020 on an annualised basis to hit its current level of 149 TWh, an all-time high.
— AFP photo Obtaining bitcoin is an energy intensive endeavor, and the chart showed the evolution of its power usage, rising constantly from 2016 and accelerati­ng sharply in 2020 on an annualised basis to hit its current level of 149 TWh, an all-time high.

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